And that's not just fluff. As noted in the article, in the past couple of years alone, Dallas hip-hop producers have been behind some of your favorite tracks from the likes of Jay-Z, Kanye West, Beyonce, Lil Wayne, T-Pain, Nicki Minaj, Snoop Dogg, Paul Wall, Bun B, Nelly, Akon, Pitbull, Chamillionaire, Talib Kweli, Wiz Khalifa, Dom Kennedy, Big Sean, Curren$y, Mac Miller, Kid Cudi, Nipsey Hustle, Rhymefest, Smoke DZA and even international house music superstar David Guetta. It's an impressive list, no doubt.

But, most impressive of all, in 2011 at least, have been the efforts of Larry Griffin Jr., otherwise known as Symbolyc One. Between the still-great "Power" off West's My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, "Best Thing I Never Had" off of Beyonce's 4, and, most recently, the much-lauded "Excellence" portion of the two-songs-in-one "Murder to Excellence" from West and Jay-Z's collaborative, much-hyped Watch The Throne, S1's had the most successful year of his life in '11.

"Most definitely," he admits over the phone this week, taking a moment to reflect on his successes.

Interestingly enough, though, S1 promises that the year he's had is only going to get better. He still expects to have a song with 50 Cent later this year. He's even got an upcoming track coming with Willow Smith -- something he's double excited about, since Griffin's 13-year-old son, production prodigy VohnBeatz, is also likely to be working on a track with Willow's 13-year-old brother, Jaden Smith, star of the Karate Kid remake, in the near future.

"I'm really excited about that," Griffin says.

Oh, and his own group, Strange Fruit Project, should have its next album ready within the next week -- two weeks tops.

So, clearly, he's a busy dude these days. Still, he was gracious enough to tell us a little backstory on his work on "Excellence," while also passing along a clip of how he created the beat. Check out the video, and read S1's thoughts on how the song came out, after the jump.

Griffin says he'd known since pretty early on in the recording process that his song was going to be a collaborative effort with Swizz Beatz.

"I did," he says. "That song started out as two separate tracks. Once they were done, though, Kanye was like, 'What would these two songs sound like together?' Then he did that -- right there in the studio. Everyone went crazy. So I knew it'd stay that way."